ok i have to retract what i said about ram-1 chip, i think because i just noticed at the far right.. see that ram-1 chip also has that parity chip at the end of it..
so if thats the case and that chip indicates its parity or ECC ram then its also
not compatible.
GET SOME COMPATIBLE RAM!
it says the ram has to have two banks of 256Mbit per side, in a 32x8 configuration
you want ram that is visually similar to this . this is a 32x8 sdram
compare visually with ram-1 chip :its clear to see that they are different types
ram-2 chip
ram-fail chip
this ram stuff can be tricky + confusing
im not even sure what i said is correct but here,
ill show u my ram chips just pulled from my 933 quicksilver (which is similar to a digital audio mac)
you can see they are identical chips at least, and 8 chips per side
honestly i think its true that the 512mb dimms are alot more of a headache with compatibility
it may be less problematic for debugging purposes at least to just use 3 x 256MB modules
i think u are far far far less likely to have compatibility issues if u were installing 256mb modules
i use 256mb modules in most of my g3/g4's, even my mdd has 4 x 256 mb modules
the quicksilver that i took these chips out of just now, is the most stable mac i think i have! fast + rock solid
+ quiet + never crashed once since i got it i dont think i believe its the 2002 933mhz model
i dont think 512mb modules were commonplace in 2001, they were just coming out? brand new?
i wouldnt want to use 512mb modules in anything lower than digital audio.. ive used them in my sawtooth under osx
to get 2gb ram, but theres no point under os 9, i never install more then 1gb because in my own observations i think it does best with 1gb or less ram to be honest. my g3 450mhz is faster with less ram installed i didnt do any specfic measuring but it just feels faster.. hocus pocus
anyway good luck to you canned brain on debugging your problems with your 533. if i didnt provide the answer i hope i at least helped in working your way through the possibilities.
stability is something you definately want in a computer!